A-LuGei 【𝟰𝟲𝗣𝗖𝗦 & 5 Size】Tool Box Organizer Tray Divider Set, 【Black】 Desk Drawer Organizer, Garage Organization and Storage Toolbox Accessories Rolling Tool Chest Cart Cabinet WorkBench Small Part

【𝟰𝟲𝗣𝗖𝗦 & 5 Size】Tool Box Organizer Tray Divider Set, 【Black】 Desk Drawer Organizer, Garage Organization and Storage Toolbox Accessories Rolling Tool Chest Cart Cabinet WorkBench Small Part

Features

  • 【100% SATISFACTION GUARANTEED】You will start a never regret shopping experience. Because customer satisfaction is our priority, we guarantee 100% return in 365 days if you are not completely satisfied with our product after receiving our parts organizer.You can feel free to shop and contact us when you have any questions.
  • 【Organize Your Tool Tidy】These tool trays are made from high quality solid durable plastic, ideal for storing tools, such as slip-joint plier, combination wrench, screwdriver, utility knife, groove joint plier, claw hammer, junior hacksaw, screwdriver bits, ratchet wrench, spark plug driver socket, extension bar, spring clamp, stripper, torpedo level, tape measure, hex key, scissor, long nose plier, saw, ruler, knife blade, nails, screws, bolts, tackle, gasket, clamp, and any other small parts.
  • 【46Pcs & 5 Sizes】 These toolbox organizers and storage have 46 pcs and 5 sizes. These tool box accessories contain 2 X-Large sizes, 4 Large sizes,8 Medium sizes, 8 Short Medium sizes, and 24 Small sizes. Small size:3*3*2 inch, Short Medium size:6*3*2 inch, Medium size:9*3*2 inch, Large size:9*6*2 inch, X-Large size:12*6*2inch
  • 【Customized by Interlocking Design】 These tool storage organizers adopt interlocking design.The design can help you to organize and create your own style to fit in drawers, a good solution to make your tool box, tool cart, roller tool chest, workbenchesmore neat.You can use separately or mix and match. Every tool organizers and storage can lock together in any arrangement that works for you.
  • 【Various Usage Scenario】 These 46 tool chest organizers are perfect for organize your toolbox, tool cart, roller tool chest, workbenches and so on. Will fit inside shallow drawers and in standard tool boxes.And these tool storage box can also use in the kitchen, bathroom, vanity makeup, or office — this multipurpose desk drawer organizer tray shallow keeps your things in order. You can freely mix and match

Specifications

Color 46pcs Black
Size 5 size
Unit Count 46

This set contains 46 interlocking, durable plastic organizer trays in five sizes (2 x‑large 12×6×2 in, 4 large 9×6×2 in, 8 medium 9×3×2 in, 8 short‑medium 6×3×2 in, 24 small 3×3×2 in) for sorting tools and small parts. The trays lock together in customizable arrangements to fit shallow drawers, toolboxes, tool carts, workbenches, or household and office storage.

Model Number: FBA-YZ011-EU-tool

A-LuGei 【𝟰𝟲𝗣𝗖𝗦 & 5 Size】Tool Box Organizer Tray Divider Set, 【Black】 Desk Drawer Organizer, Garage Organization and Storage Toolbox Accessories Rolling Tool Chest Cart Cabinet WorkBench Small Part Review

4.6 out of 5

Why I reached for this organizer

My shallow tool drawers were turning into a catch‑all of loose bits, drivers, and fasteners. I wanted a modular system I could reconfigure as my workflow changed, without committing to a single molded tray that dictates where everything goes. The A‑LuGei organizer trays promised exactly that: a stack of small bins in multiple sizes that interlock to form a custom layout. After several weeks using them in a rolling tool chest, a workbench drawer, and a home office desk, I’ve got a clear sense of where they shine and where they fall short.

What’s in the box

You get 46 trays in five sizes, all 2 inches tall:
- 2 extra‑large trays: 12 x 6 in
- 4 large trays: 9 x 6 in
- 8 medium trays: 9 x 3 in
- 8 short‑medium trays: 6 x 3 in
- 24 small trays: 3 x 3 in

The spread heavily favors small squares. That’s great for fasteners, driver bits, wire ferrules, and other small parts; less ideal if your focus is long hand tools.

Build quality and design

The plastic is better than I expected for the price. Walls are thick enough to resist flexing when loaded with screws or sockets, and the edges are clean with no sharp mold lines. The surface has a light texture that hides scuffs and wipes clean easily. At 2 inches tall, these are meant for shallow drawers—perfect in most top drawers of a tool chest and standard desk drawers, but they’ll feel short in deep cabinet drawers where you’re paying for empty headroom.

Each tray has interlocking lips so you can click neighboring trays together into a grid. The links are on the edges, and they’re easy to join without tools. The mechanism provides enough lateral stability to keep rows aligned when you open and close a drawer, but it’s not a rigid frame—if your drawer slams shut, sections can still shift. Think of the interlock as light corralling rather than a hard lock.

One note on dimensions: the stated sizes track the internal floor well, but the top lips flare slightly. In tight drawers, those lips can be the difference between a neat fit and a tray that rides up on the edge. Measure the usable interior width at the top of your drawer, not just the base, before committing to a layout.

Setup and fitment

I started by lining my chest’s top drawer with a thin rubber drawer liner. That single step dramatically reduced sliding. From there, I mocked up a layout on the bench and clicked the trays together before placing the assembly into the drawer. The 12 x 6 bins anchored the back for longer items (torpedo level, long nose pliers), the 9 x 6s held plier sets and tape measures, and the 9 x 3s were perfect for nut drivers, chisels, and pry tools. The 3 x 3s turned into an inventory system for screws, anchors, washers, and snap rings.

In a desk drawer, I went lighter on the interlocks and relied on the liner; that made it faster to pull out a single bin to the desktop for sorting and drop it back in. The modularity is the point—you can intentionally leave small gaps to fit odd drawer widths, or tighten up the grid to maximize capacity.

Day‑to‑day use

  • Tool chest: The set excels at separating families of small tools and parts. Sockets, bits, and fasteners stay in their lanes, and I stopped wasting time fishing for a single Torx bit. The 2‑inch height keeps everything visible at a glance. The limitation is length. Only two bins are 12 inches long, and there are only four at 9 inches. That isn’t much real estate for longer screwdrivers, files, or pliers. I ended up storing long drivers diagonally or moving them to a deeper drawer with different organizers.

  • Workbench drawer: For a “junk” drawer that had become a Tetris of tape, blades, glue sticks, batteries, and cable ties, this set was a tidy win. The small bins make it trivial to quarantine messy items—used utility blades and small adhesives get their own homes rather than rolling into everything else.

  • Office desk: Pens, markers, paper clips, USB drives, SD cards, and spare chargers all found a defined spot. The black color looks tidy but can camouflage small black screws or microSD cards; I added white labels to a few fronts for quick identification.

Where it works best

  • Small parts-heavy setups: electronics, automotive clips, plumbing washers, drywall anchors, wire connectors.
  • Shallow drawers in tool carts and chests where 2 inches of height makes everything easy to see.
  • Mixed-use household drawers where you need many small compartments rather than a few big ones.

What could be better

  • More long trays: The set is skewed toward 3 x 3 bins. For tool-centric layouts, a second pair of 12 x 6s and more 9‑inch options would be welcome. As it stands, longer hand tools end up diagonal or elsewhere.

  • Interlock strength: The connectors prevent casual drift but won’t stop movement in drawers that slam shut. A liner solves most of this, but if you’re expecting a rigid grid, you’ll be disappointed.

  • Fit tolerance: Because the top lips add a bit to the footprint, some “perfect” layouts on paper won’t drop into tight drawers. Allow a little margin when planning.

  • Grip: The bases have modest texture but not true anti‑slip. If your drawers are bare metal or finished wood, pair these with a liner or add a few clear gel dots to the corners.

Tips for getting the most from the set

  • Start with a liner. It’s the cheapest way to keep the array in place and reduce rattling.
  • Build a mock layout on your bench first. It’s easier to move pieces around before you commit them to the drawer.
  • Group by task, not just by size. For example, keep your electrical odds and ends in adjacent bins so the whole “zone” comes to hand at once.
  • Label the fronts of the small squares if you store a lot of similar hardware. You’ll stop opening three bins to find the right screw.
  • Leave a narrow “service lane” at the front of a drawer to grab frequently used bins without disturbing the rest.

Durability and maintenance

After weeks of daily use, none of the trays have cracked or deformed. The interlock lips still click securely, and the black plastic hides scuffs well. Cleaning is as simple as a damp cloth; for greasy residue or graphite dust, a quick rinse in warm soapy water did the trick. Because there are no felt liners or absorbent materials, they don’t hold odors or oil.

The set I received included a card noting a lengthy satisfaction guarantee, which is reassuring. These are simple parts, but it’s good to know support exists if something arrives damaged.

Alternatives to consider

If your drawers are deeper or your tools are longer, a system with more long trays or full-width modular trays might suit you better. Foam insert kits are another route if you want silhouettes for specific tool sets, though you lose the easy reconfigurability that makes this system appealing. For purely desktop use, lower-profile acrylic organizers look cleaner but won’t stand up to a metal toolbox environment.

Bottom line and recommendation

The A‑LuGei organizer trays do exactly what a modular bin system should: turn chaotic drawers into predictable, repeatable layouts that fit your space, not the other way around. The plastic is sturdy, the dimensions are consistent, and the interlocking design makes setup straightforward. Their strengths are in organizing small parts and compact tools in shallow drawers; their weaknesses are the limited number of long bins and modest interlock grip, both of which are manageable with planning and a simple drawer liner.

I recommend this set for anyone looking to tame small parts in tool chests, workbench drawers, or household “junk” drawers, especially if you value flexibility and plan to reconfigure over time. If your priority is long hand tools, pair this kit with additional long trays or consider a different configuration heavy on 12‑inch compartments. For most mixed-use drawers, the value and versatility are hard to beat.



Project Ideas

Business

Drawer Organization Service for Trades

Offer a service targeting mechanics, electricians, HVAC techs and makers: measure clients' tool chests/drawers, design optimized tray layouts, install the interlocking trays and label each compartment. Charge a flat fee per drawer or an hourly rate plus travel. Additional revenue from upselling custom-labeled trays, magnetic inserts, foam tool outlines or maintenance/refill subscriptions (periodic restock of consumables).


Pre-configured Profession Kits (E‑commerce)

Create and sell pre-configured tray sets tailored to niches: 'Bike Mechanic Starter', 'Jewelry Studio', 'Electronics Repair', 'DIY Homeowner', with recommended contents, labels and printable layout guides. Package trays with suggested parts lists and optional curated fill-packs (screws, anchors, o-rings). Market through Etsy, Shopify or Amazon; margin from curated consumables and branded packaging.


Workshop Makeover & Training Workshops

Run local ‘workshop makeover’ events or corporate team-buildings where you redesign a community makerspace or small shop using the trays. Offer a half-day workshop teaching organization best practices (5S, tool shadowing) and sell starter tray bundles and labeling kits on-site. Revenue from event fees, product sales, and follow-up consulting for larger shops.


Mobile Repair Kits for Field Technicians

Assemble standardized modular mobile kits for independent contractors (plumbers, locksmiths, appliance repair). Each kit uses interlocking trays so the tech can remove just the needed module. Sell kits plus subscription restock service for consumables and common spare parts. Target trade associations, franchise owners, and online marketplaces for tools and parts.


Retail Display & Pop-up Organizer Solutions

Offer small retailers and craft fair vendors a modular display system built from the trays—custom-labeled, padded inserts and clear lids to showcase small products (earrings, charms, screws, hobby parts). Provide rental or sale options for pop-up shops and markets, plus add-on services like branded decals, lighting and transport cases. Revenue from rentals, customization fees and product sales.

Creative

Modular Craft Workstation

Build a tabletop craft station by locking trays into a grid on a shallow shelf or inside a shallow drawer. Use the small trays for beads, buttons and findings; medium trays for thread, ribbons and pens; large trays for scissors, glue guns and rotary cutters; and x-large trays for larger tools. Label each tray, add a thin anti-slip mat and a magnetic strip across the back for metal bits. The interlocking design keeps everything in place and lets you reconfigure the layout for different projects (sewing, leatherwork, model building).


Modular Mini Planter Wall

Turn trays into a vertical succulent/herb wall. Line each tray with a thin plastic/landscape fabric liner and add drainage holes, then mount the locked-together tray array on a backing board. Use the small trays for cuttings and the large/x-large trays for small herbs. The modular nature lets you expand or swap trays seasonally. Add decorative paint or vinyl on the backing for an attractive indoor living wall.


Custom Shadow-Box Diorama Grid

Create a wall-mounted gallery of tiny dioramas or shadow boxes by using the trays as individual display cubbies. Each small tray becomes a themed vignette (miniature scene, jewelry display, keepsake), medium and large trays can hold larger scenes. Paint interiors, add LED strip lighting behind trays for accent, and mount the whole assembled array for an eye-catching art installation or child’s storytelling wall.


Portable Repair/Project Cart Insert

Convert the trays into a portable, lockable drawer insert for a rolling cart or toolbox that becomes a grab-and-go repair kit. Arrange trays with fasteners, connectors, fuses, O-rings, and common tool bits in logical groups. Add removable clear lids (cut-to-fit acetate) to some trays to keep tiny parts visible and secure during transport—great for bike repair, electronics tinkering, or field maintenance.


Interlocking Jewelry & Trinket Organizer

Design layered jewelry organizers for necklaces, earrings, rings and watch storage. Use small trays for rings/earrings with foam inserts or velvet liners, medium trays with hooks drilled for hanging necklaces, and large trays for watches and cufflinks. Stack or tile the trays in a vanity drawer, or create a desktop display with acrylic lids for boutique-style presentation.